Invisible Man Entry
By: Venidikt • Essay • 355 Words • November 28, 2009 • 1,132 Views
Essay title: Invisible Man Entry
Invisible Man Journal Entry #1
To me, the most interesting part of this novel so far is the interaction with Jim Trueblood and the story that he tells. The different reactions that Jim gets from white people and black people is especially interesting because the whites, upon hearing about what Jim did with his daughter, describe the act as something disgusting but to be expected of or typical of black people and yet they offer Jim support while the black community shuns him.
I find it hard to understand, however, why exactly Jim receives the treatment that he does from the white people. I think our analysis of Mr. Norton’s fascination with Jim that we discussed in class is a reasonable explanation, that he might have had some kind of encounter with or felt sexually attracted to his own daughter, but obviously not all of the whites who offer Jim help could be in the same situation. It might be to suggest the impurity of the white people, that all of them have had some kind of unspeakable experience which makes them more interested and willing to listen to Jim.
It is also possible that the white people want to keep Jim